One of the main goals of Life4me+ — is to prevent new cases of HIV and other STIs, hepatitis C and tuberculosis.

The app helps to establish anonym communication between physicians and HIV-positive people. It allows you to conveniently organize your medication intake timetable and set concealed and personalized reminders.

Researchers Consider Hepatitis C Vertical Transmission Rates

With estimates of about 3% of the worldwide population currently infected with hepatitis C (HCV), the focus is largely on high-risk populations such as intravenous (IV) drug users, where transmission rates are highest, MD magazine reports. Children are a sometimes forgotten population in the ongoing battle against HCV.

The primary source of HCV infection in children is vertical, or mother-to-child, transmission, which occurs in 5% to 10% of at-risk pregnancies. The majority of at-risk pregnant women with chronic HCV acquired the disease through IV drug use.

Although recent data suggests that the number of children born infected with HCV is on the rise, the number of reported cases is lower than expected. With inconsistent testing of children who are at the highest risk, it has become clear that there are children living with HCV infection that have gone undetected, which is a cause for concern since the majority of HCV-infected children experience persistent infection.

Sharon Reid, PhD, a physician at the Drug Health Services at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital and a lecturer in clinical epidemiology at the Sydney School of Public Health at Sydney Medical School in Australia, set out with colleagues to investigate HCV testing in at-risk pregnant women and their offspring.

“We aimed to investigate HCV testing patterns and health-care engagement for women with HCV in pregnancy and their children through pregnancy and the first 2 years of the child’s life,” researchers wrote.

The primary objective of the study was to estimate HCV testing rates in at-risk children.

The Impact of Vertically Acquired Hepatitis C (IVAHC) study took place at an inner-city tertiary hospital in Sydney, Australia. Women included in the study had to be at least 18 years old, pregnant, anti-HCV positive, and able to provide consent. The women and children included in the study were followed from pregnancy through the child’s second birthday.

None of the children in the study (31) were identified as having vertically acquired HCV. Half of the children in the study had incomplete HCV testing, while only 3 children in the study (10%) had complete HCV testing. One of the biggest barriers to both HCV testing as well as follow-up was that 13 of the children in the study (nearly half) were placed in out-of-home-care (OOHC) shortly after birth.

Other limitations of the study included small sample size and incomplete outcome data due to study participants being lost to follow-up.

“Despite its limitations, this study suggests further work is needed to develop systematic and cross-institutional approaches to improving follow-up and testing of at-risk children, particularly those placed in OOHC,” researchers concluded.

The study, “Vertical transmission of hepatitis C: Testing and health-care engagement,” was published online in the Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health this month.